snow hope wrote:FC, your decision was a very severe one, I hedge my bets more than you.
Maybe. I think I was hedging pretty well.
I had a decent vegetable garden and several fruit trees. I had enough tinned food to last a year. I have a good supply of rechargeable batteries. I have solar panels, tons of wind up stuff. I have enough stuff to open a survivalists shop.
And yet. I had a couple of run-in's with some teenagers and my next door neighbour had ten kids. I concluded that I could ride out a slow collapse.
A fast collapse, however, I'd be likely to become a target.
I concluded that the most likely effect of peak oil in the UK is hyperinflation and that counts as a fast collapse. In such a scenario I decided I was fncked no two ways about it.
But I sympathise very much with your position, it must have been a very difficult decision, personally I think I would have tried to move to a safer place in England first of all, but you know what is right for your situation.
Thank you, but I don't think there are any safe places in England unless you already own a farm out in the sticks. Things hit home when my wife pointed out that no matter how much preparation we do, we need to be billionaires with a private army etc to survive what I was expecting and that even though I made good money it probably wasn't enough to get by.
She was right. When the economy tanked I decided we had no choice and we just jumped ship.
When I first told my middle son (now at uni) about Peak Oil, a couple of months before his GCSEs, his response was "what is the point of studying any more" - which shocked me and taught me a lesson - I needed to ease back on the message!
That's exactly what happened to my boy who was in primary 4 at the time. He just stopped working at school and started acting up.
My little guy became a bit depressed. He became really excited when I told him we were going to move to Canada but I think the reality of life out here doesn't meet with his expectations.
My boys know the basics about Peak Oil, but I do not discuss it too often. As others have said they can see some things from my preparations - wood store, veg garden, insulation, hybrid car, interest in renewable energy, etc.
I've changed my message around: unless you are rich you depend on other people for our living and thus we're better off where we are.
I do think things will get bad FC. How bad? I have no real idea. But I think it appropriate to prepare for things being substantially different to normal. I think "normal" will not exist soon.
I agree with that assessment. Where I disagree is that I don't think every country is going to be equally badly off. Some will disintegrate, some will suffer long periods of hyperinflation and become failed states (I think this is the likely fate of the UK), others will suffer minimally and yet others will benefit.
My veg garden is my mitigation strategy for supermarket shelves going empty and I have some food stocks and a plan I can put in place as soon as TSHTF to substantially boost my food stock at very short notice.
I hope belfast isn't as violent as my own home town.
Good luck mate.